The ordinary Bangladeshis except the "who is who" are getting less in their pockets, while being forced to pay more for their livelihood. Each time the government hikes prices of utilities or the dishonest trading syndicates manipulate with the prices of the essentials, it is the commoners who bear the brunt. The tales of miseries are not only of the hand-to-mouth wage earners. The constant and consistent rise in the prices - pushing up the cost of living - has long been a common phenomenon in Bangladesh. Each time the hikes strike the hapless people making them more helpless the government ministers have a well-versed set response: the syndicates are the culprits. They will surely be hunted down.
Behind the scene and beyond the reach of the law, even if it is applied, those supposed culprits just flash a smile. "Oh, the same old dreary warning coming from toothless authorities!" is their reaction. The prices are rising under the nose of the authorities with the syndicated traders or better say manipulators and hoarders are having the last laugh. The history beginning from the days of Pakistan to this day of Bangladesh at 50 has been same for the commoners, the day labours, the marginal farmers, traders, domestic aids and street hawkers, rickshaw pullers and even the mid-income people above them. Whenever the prices jump abnormally it is the syndicate and not the failure of the authorities and their policies to be blamed. Add to this in today's context the claim that the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war are behind the soaring prices of essentials ranging from fish to meat to edible oil to flour to onion and lentil. With Ramadan, the holy month of fasting for Muslims, knocking at the door the commodity prices are spiking almost day by day. The more the prices increase the longer the lines become with low-to-middle-income city dwellers scrambling for fair-price commodities offered by state-run Trading Corporation of Bangladesh (TCB) aboard trucks across Dhaka city. Trucks loaded with onions, lentils, green peas, dates, sugar and edible oil are intervening in the market price in Dhaka and elsewhere in the country. It has been going on for quite a few months. How effective has it been in taming the market, which is on fire, is a question in the minds of many. It has been already reported that the trucks become empty before the last in the lines reach them. Media reports quoted some of these disappointed people who said they failed to get anything from the trucks even after a wait for five hours. They had been the double losers: going home empty-handed plus losing the day's wages. Also, there have been complaints that some people repeat their presence in the queues to get extra products and then sell those to the open market at higher prices. It happens as there is no system of identifying the receivers.
In a country where supplies are in normal supply and common people's demand remaining normal why would the prices of the essentials witness such galloping increase? The media reports in the past week told us that edible oil vanished from some wholesale shelves amid a little bit of lowered price. Market analysts have been quoted as saying that this is nothing but the work of the profiteers who love to thrive by creating an artificial crisis. The foul play has been intensified with the approach of the holy month of Ramadan which culminates into one of the two biggest Islamic festivals. Like their fellow-faiths worldwide Muslims in Bangladesh too are preparing for the practice of Siam for a month to be followed by the Eid festival. Bangladesh, however, stands apart from others in regard to the run-away behavior of prices ahead of such festivals. While Muslims in other countries are allowed to enjoy price discounts on the products they buy, their counterparts in Bangladesh become victims of fleecing by greedy traders with the authorities doing nothing except verbal vows to crack down on them. Occasionally though mobile courts penalize some of the unscrupulous traders here and there without having any long-term impact. It's the corrupt system that needs to be overhauled. The system draws strength and sustenance from the corrupt power too. Unless and until this system is hit hard and changed in favour of the people, nothing is going to help. Frankly speaking if the power is designed to make sure only the rich will benefit at the expenses of the poor no angel can help us. The system is rock solid in its greedy and nasty quest of plundering the nation's wealth and making the common people to pay for it. It has to change drastically indeed. Words and empty threats won't work. Actions would. But meaningful actions come only when the unhealthy system is replaced by a people-friendly set-up.
Fred wanted ever so much to send home a goldfish with a very wide and beautiful tail. The fish didn't seem to be much unlike a common goldfish, except in the tail, which was triple, and looked like a piece of lace. As it swam around in the water, especially when the sun was shining on the globe, its tail seemed to have nearly as many colors as the rainbow, and both the boys were of opinion that no more beautiful fish was ever seen. But the proposal to send it to America was rather dampened by the statement of the Doctor that the experiment had been tried several times, and only succeeded in a very few instances. Almost all the fish died on the voyage over the Pacific; and even when they lived through that part of the trip, the overland journey from San Francisco to the Atlantic coast generally proved too much for them. The Japanese name for this fish is kin-giyo, and a pair of them may be bought for ten cents. It is said that a thousand dollars were offered for the first one that ever reached New York alive, which is a large advance on the price in Yokohama. "It is a long story," said Doctor Bronson, "and I am not sure that you will find it altogether interesting; but it is a part of Japanese history that you ought to know, especially in view of the fact that the Samurai exist no longer. With the revolution of 1868 and the consequent overthrow of the old customs, the Samurai class was extinguished, and the wearing of two swords is forbidden. "Miz Wall!" cried the husband--"She's busy talkin'.--Miz Wall!--she don't hyuh me. I hate to interrupt heh.--Oh, Miz Wall! hyuh's Majo' Harper's clerk, right now!" Behind it was a black motor and the form of Balmayne. and now has been sent away to a hospital. That took all their savings, 178 "Halt nothin'," said Si, brushing him out of the way. "I'm goin' to git these youngsters their breakfast before there's a tornado or an earthquake. Go 'way, if you know what's good for you." Specification III.—That said Corp'l William L. Elliott, Co. Q, 200th Ind. Vol. Inf., did insult with many opprobrious words, the said Adolph Steigermeyer, Second Corps, U. S. Engr's, his superior officer, in the presence of many enlisted men, in violation of the 6th Article of War and of the discipline of the Armies of the United States. This on the march of the army from Dalton, Ga., to Calhoun, Ga., and on the 16th day of May, 1864. "O, goodness gracious!" murmured little Pete Skidmore, almost fainting with terror, in the covert of oak leaves, just above the court's head, whither he had noiselessly climbed, to overhear everything. "He's a-goner, sure! They'll shoot him, sure as guns. Saltpeter won't save him. He's broke every Article o' War in the whole book. My, what will I do?" HoME欧美一级v片视频下载 欧美一级电视连续剧 欧美一级香蕉大毛片 欧美一级毛片下载ENTER NUMBET 00199x3yh0.com.cn silijiren.com.cn yunyuantang.com.cn multasty.com.cn www.vstline.com.cn www.gaodehui.com.cn www.paypex.com.cn www.ferna.com.cn www.mglsoft.net.cn www.jsbydq.com.cn
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